Tuesday, September 05, 2017

£15,000 Taylor Wessing Photographic Portrait Prize 2017 - Shortlist announced

The three works shortlisted for the Taylor Wessing Photographic Portrait Prize 2017 include photographs of
  • a migrant rescued in the Mediterranean Sea off the Libyan coast; 
  • a Japanese android called Erica; and 
  • a girl fleeing ISIS in Mosul, Iraq
The shortlisted portraits and photographers are:
  • Amadou Sumaila by César Dezfuli
  • One of Them Is a Human #1 by Maija Tammi (Erica: Erato Ishiguro Symbiotic Human-Robot Interaction Project.) 
  • Fleeing Mosul from the series Women in War: Life After ISIS by Abbie Trayler-Smith
Three shortlisted photographic portraits
From left) Amadou Sumaila by César Dezfuli
One of Them Is a Human #1 (Erica: Erato Ishiguro Symbiotic Human-Robot Interaction Project) by Maija Tammi
Fleeing Mosul from the series Women in War: Life After ISIS by Abbie Trayler-Smith
Here's more about the photographers and their selected photographs.

The exhibition is at the National Portrait Gallery from 16th November 2017 until 4th February 2018

Taylor Wessing Photographic Portrait Prize 2017 - Shortlist


This year the major international photography award - for portrait photography - organised by the National Portrait Gallery, London is celebrating the tenth anniversary of Taylor Wessing's sponsorship.

The prizes

  • The Prize for winning the competition is £15,000. 
  • The judges, at their discretion, will also award cash prizes to one or more shortlisted photographers. (The second Prize winner receives £3,000 and the Third Prize £2,000.)
  • The People’s Pick allows exhibition visitors the opportunity to vote for their favourite portrait in the show.
The prizes for the Taylor Wessing Photographic Portrait Prize 2017 and the winner of the sixth John Kobal New Work Award will be announced on Tuesday 14 November 2017 at 19.00.

The competition


5,717 submissions entered by 2,423 photographers from 66 countries. A total of 59 portraits from 50 artists were selected for display, in which 18 were part of a series.

Photographers were again encouraged to submit works as a series in addition to stand-alone portraits, and there was no minimum size requirement for prints.

Judging Panel


This year’s judging panel was
  • Dr Nicholas Cullinan, Chair (Director, National Portrait Gallery, London); 
  • David Campany (Writer, Curator and Artist); 
  • Tim Eyles, Managing Partner, Taylor Wessing LLP; 
  • Sabina Jaskot-Gill (Associate Curator, Photographs, National Portrait Gallery, London); 
  • Fiona Shields (Head of Photography, The Guardian) and 
  • Gillian Wearing (Artist.)
Their choice gives me a certain sense of "other worldliness" about the prize - and maybe this was the intention of the judges curating the exhibition and their choice.

Alternatively maybe this is an expression of contemporary themes and interests of today's photographers.

Just three photographic portraits have been shortlisted.

César Dezfuli

Age: born in Madrid on 10 January 1991
Nationality:
 Spanish-Persian origins
Occupation:
 journalist and documentary photographer - focuses on issues of migration, identity and human rights
Current home: 
Madrid
Education: 
Double Degree in Journalism and Media Studies
Previous appearances in this award:
  None
Website:
http://www.cesardezfuli.com

Amadou Sumaila © César Dezfuli;
The sitter Amadou Sumaila was photographed in the Mediterranean Sea, in international Waters 20 nautical miles off the Libyan coast. He has since been transferred from a rescue vessel to a temporary reception centre for migrants in Italy. The portrait was taken as part of Dezfuli’s work as a freelancer, documenting the search and rescue of migrants on board an NGO vessel in the Central Mediterranean Route.

Maija Tammi 


Age: born 5th June 1985
Nationality:
 Finnish
Occupation:
 regularly works with scientists; background in photojournalism - photographs engage with science and aesthetics. 
Art education: 
Masters in visual journalism ; currently working on her studio art-based doctoral thesis at Aalto University School of Arts, Design and Architecture in Helsinki, Finland.
Previous appearances in this award: None
Website:
 http://www.maijatammi.com
Exhibitions: exhibited in Europe, North America and Asia.

One of Them Is a Human #1Series: (Erica: Erato Ishiguro Symbiotic Human-Robot Interaction Project.)© Maija Tammi;
Tammy’s photograph portrays Erica, an android from Hiroshi Ishiguro Laboratories. One of Them Is a Human #1 is part of a broader series which presents androids alongside one human and asks questions about what it means to be alive. The photograph was taken at Ishiguro Laboratory, Department of Systems Innovation at Osaka University, in an experiment room where researchers work with Erica. 
“I had half an hour with Erica and a young researcher in which to take the photograph. The researcher told me that Erica had said that she finds Pokemon Go scarier than artificial intelligence.”

Abbie Trayler-Smith


Age: born 20 May 1977
Nationality:
 born and raised in South Wales
Education: - 
Occupation:
 documentary and portrait photographer. Her work covers women’s rights, social development and the aftermath of conflict.

spent eight years as a photographer with The Daily Telegraph, covering world events such as the Darfur conflict, the Iraq war and the Asian tsunami, before deciding to go freelance in 2007.
Current home: based in London
Clients: wide variety of clients including Time, The Sunday Times, The Independent Review, Marie-Claire, Tatler, Monocle, Vice, Oxfam, Save The Children, IRC, UNICEF, Sony and BBC worldwide.
Previous appearances in this award:
  The Big O, won 4th prize in The National Portrait Gallery’s 2010 Taylor Wessing Prize.
Website:
 http://www.abbietraylersmith.com

Fleeing Mosul
from the series Women in War: Life After ISIS
© Abbie Trayler-Smith
Her shortlisted photograph was shot outside Hasan Sham IDP camp in Northern Iraq. Trayler-Smith was there undertaking a commission for Oxfam documenting the camp where the charity was providing aid, talking to women who had lived under ISIS who were prepared to be photographed. A convoy of buses arrived from Mosul, bringing people to safety who had escaped the battle just hours before.

"I just remember seeing her face looking out at the camp and the shock and the bewilderment in her’s and other’s faces and it made me shudder to imagine what living under ISIS had been like. To me the uncertainty in her face echoes the faces of people having to flee their homes around the world and references a global feeling of insecurity."

More about the Taylor Wessing Photographic Portrait Prize


The posts below contain images of past prizewinning portraits.

1 comment:

  1. I was absoloutly gobsmacked by the descision to allow a picture of a " Android ,a term I use loosely " in the shortlist. It is an insult to all the hard working and honest photographers to include an entry of a non human when the rules state " a living person " , the other two shortlisted entries are worthy with both being strong visually and telling a story wheras maija tammis entry is very ordinary, well lit but thats it,she claims that it is indicative of the relationship between the subject and a human off shot but I dont buy into this self indulgent claptrap,I think that next year I will enter some pictures of pinocchio with a back story claiming that I am investigating the relationship between humans and what it means to be made from a tree.

    ReplyDelete

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